Sunday Black Vegan News Roundup


Black Vegans at Intersectional Justice Conference

Christopher Sebastian McJetters, Pax Ahimsa Gethen, and Aph Ko. (Photo Credit: Ziggy Tomcich).

Christopher Sebastian McJetters, Pax Ahimsa Gethen, and Aph Ko. (Photo Credit: Ziggy Tomcich).

Last weekend, the Intersectional Justice Conference at Whidbey Island (Washington) featured many Black vegan speakers and guests. Aph Ko, Dr. Amie Breeze Harper, Pax Ahimsa Gethen, and Brenda Sanders gave powerful speeches. Black vegan guests included JoVonna Johnson-Cooke (MaituFoods), David and Paige Carter (300lb vegan), Unique Vance (Vegan Voices of Color), and Keith Tucker (Green Hip Hop Dinners). Christopher Sebastian McJetters was one of the organizers of the conference. You can find a writeup of the conference on the Funcrunch Files, and you find more pictures HERE. 

Brenda Sanders (Photo Credit: Pax Ahimsa Gethen)

Brenda Sanders (Photo Credit: Pax Ahimsa Gethen)

Dr. Amie Breeze Harper (Photo Credit: Pax Ahimsa Gethen)

Dr. Amie Breeze Harper (Photo Credit: Pax Ahimsa Gethen)

Group photo by Pax Ahimsa Gethen

Group photo by Pax Ahimsa Gethen


John Legend and "Scandal" Star Joe Morton Team Up for Play on Dick Gregory

Sergio of Shadow and Act writes:

"...It was announced today John Legend is producing an Off-Broadway production titled 'Turn Me Loose,' a comedy-drama written by Gretchen Law about the life of Gregory. Joe Morton (“Scandal”) is attached to star as the now 83-year-old." Dick Gregory is a famous civil rights activist and vegan! 


NYU Panel on Analogy Between Human Slavery and Animal Oppression

On April 22nd at 6:00pm, Steve Wise (President of NonHuman Rights Project), Aph Ko, and Christopher Sebastian McJetters will be presenting  their thoughts on the comparison between animal oppression and human slavery. If you live near NYU, consider dropping by! Here some more information about the event. 


Healthy Me Event on April 16th! 

Make sure to check out the Healthy Me event which is coming up soon! All attendees will receive a FREE gift bag and a cookbook with all of the food served during the event!

FEATURE: Jessica Norwood

I started my vegan journey because I was faced with horrible fibroid tumors. The doctor told me that I should consider getting a hysterectomy in order to restore my health. I was uninsured at the time so this was coming from a doctor I didn’t really know and I guess that really annoyed me because this stranger was telling me that my dream of being a mother was going to end before it could ever start. 

I was determined to not let this be my last chance at motherhood. So, I decided to take a step back and consult the tribe of women. It’s our cultural way to discuss big questions with our community because we can get advice on where to go, what to look for, and what to try. Sadly, patriarchy keeps sisters from sharing the struggles and learnings of our bodies with one another openly. It made sharing a bit awkward at first but slowly, I uncovered these powerful stories about how these women healed their bodies with plant-based diets. 

Within 30 days, my fibroid tumors shrank in size and I was officially about that vegan life!

More than just a tool for reclaiming my health, I began to see the power of reclaiming the food system and our culture with food as a strategy for building equitable local economies. What if we could reclaim our food sources? Could that create more jobs and more wealth for black communities? These are the questions that guide my thinking. Today, as a cultural investor and black business strategist and commentator, I am proud to showcase food, and other culturally based businesses, as a tool for wealth building.

For me, being vegan is about more than food, it is about liberation. As a vegan I am making a declaration about how I want to be seen, how I want to be treated and how I want to show up in the world. With every bite of food, I am practicing compassion and mindfulness and extending gratitude to myself, which I can then pour out to the world around me. 

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Jessica Norwood is the Nathan Cummings Foundation Fellow and the BALLE Fellow focusing on the intersection of culture in business as tool for local wealth creation. Follow her food journey on Instagram @JessicaNorwood

FEATURE: Joe "Monk" Coleman

Hello, my name is Joe "Monk" Coleman and I am 46 years old. I took on the name Monk because my friends said my lifestyle was similar to a Monk's lifestyle...however, this wasn't always the case.  

My journey to becoming a straight edge vegan was an unconventional one. I never knew what a vegan was until about three years ago. So, here we go...I was raised in organized religion throughout my whole childhood and after I left the house I lived just the opposite of my upbringing..I was out of control to say the least. After years and years and years of this, I realized this wasn't working for me either.. I was lost.

 My life started changing the day I sat down to meditate although I didn't really know what it was. A few years into meditation practice, a friend of mine came up to me as I was sitting and eating a veggie scramble, and they asked if I was vegetarian. Without thinking I said yes. I was probably just as shocked as her by my response. The connection with all life was being made! After this I had to learn how to eat and also discovered what a vegan was and made that transition, too. 

I'm no longer the party, meat-eating, depressed, lost man that I was...My purpose now is to bring awareness and understanding, and I want to spread the message of love and compassion for myself and all others :)


FEATURE: Sarah Juanita

I went vegan because I didn't like the reckless slaughter of sentient beings and the unethical cruel treatment of black and brown bodies. I have also noticed that I feel lighter and less dense maneuvering through life this way. My vegan journey was actually pretty difficult because of the  lack of knowledge surrounding how versatile this way of life can be. I was on and off for about four years under Queen Afua's influence which, for the most part, is still an enriching experience but it was too restrictive and I ain't even gonna lie, if I am highly bored and uninspired: I slip.

When I discovered Dr, A Breeze Harper's videos (my boyfriend would later buy me her book on my 23rd solar return; Sistah Vegan), Chef Ahki's videos, and Bryant Terry's celebrated book, The Inspired Vegan: Seasonal Ingredients, Creative Recipes, Mouthwatering Menus (2012), veganism became a more viable option When I found them and their dedicated facebook groups (which featured other groups that were fun, less stressful, affordable, anti-ableist, anti-sizeist, and not elitist), I became vegan. As long as I am not eating animals or their byproducts, I'm good. As a result, I feel even more creative, healthy, and level headed.


FEATURE: Shaquille Young

I am 22 years old, and I became a vegan when I was 21, a week after my birthday. My girlfriend told me about veganism, and at first I was a bit skeptical and worried about the protein (which I now know is seriously ridiculous now that I'm thinking about it). But I was busy in the gym, becoming a bodybuilder and was really worried about how I was going to maintain the gym gains without all that "good" protein in my diet!!

So, after a ton of documentaries, articles, and books, I decided that I could totally do it and be successful in being a vegan bodybuilder. Now, a year later, I am on the verge of having bigger gains, I am fit and healthy, and additionally, I am feeling great!! Veganism for me is not only for the animals, it is for the environment that I have to share and continue to thrive in for the rest of my life. We also need to ensure that our children can thrive in a healthy environment as well. Veganism, by far, is the best adventure I have ever been on.

Fun Facts: People call me Shaq and I'm an avid traveller. 


LINKS

My instagram is: @Purely.Vegan
My youtube is: @ConsciousVegans

FEATURE: Joana Fatondji (The Afropean Vegan)

 

My name is Joana Fatondji. I am 26 years old and I am mixed, my mum is German and my dad is from Ghana. I lived in Ghana for 3 years until the age of 6. Being African was always my understanding of my Identity so back in Germany I was deeply involved in the Black community.

Today I see myself as the best of both worlds and so much more since I have grown more spiritually and free. 

I was always looking for a way of combining my talents, skills, and passion to uplifting our African community but never really got it together (because I have identified myself as multi-passionate and -talented). 

In the last 12 month I have undergone a huge transformation and just went to do everything that I always had the desire to do as well as quench my thirst for knowledge and understanding.

I quit my job as an accountant (I have a bachelor´s degree in International Business). I became a volunteer at the organization called Love from Africa, I started to dance again, this time traditional african tribal dances (dancing has been my element since I was a child), I played theater with refugees, and I was on my way to start a business as a fitness instructor of an afro-dance fitness workout called Shakuma....soon to come ;)

All along doing all those things I went from being a pescatarian to being a vegan with conviction, believing that this is the only way to bring holistic healing not only to body, mind and soul. but also to ending world hunger, CO² emission, and other unbalanced factors on this planet/gaia.

My vegan  journey started with informing myself more and more about healthy foods and on that quest you can´t avoid finding information on where our meat comes from. After watching several documentaries, I didn't want to continue to eat animal bodies nor promote this industry any longer because I personally believe that anyone who watches a documentary about meat production, slaughterhouses and so on will know that they are part of the problem. So I first became a pescatarian for also most 3 years, continuing to eat fish (At that point, I didn´t have much  information about the "production" of sea food yet). But getting deeper and further along on my spiritual journey, I made more and more connections including the connection of our human suffering to the suffering of so many innocent living and feeling beings.

I believe 100% that as soon as we know about anything wrong we must change, stand up for it, and stand in for people and animals who are suffering under us.

With the journey I have embarked on, I want to contribute to raising awareness of animal rights, human rights and nature rights because so many people want to stay ignorant to issues that are not directly in their faces. And I also want to be able to offer people a way to achieve health, vitality, spirituality, longevity and joy through a holistic approach to health of body, mind and soul through live foods.

My course to be a raw/vegan/ Ayurvedic nutritionist starts next month and as I am writing this, I am sitting in the Social Impact Lab which is a platform that supports young entrepreneurs who want to tackle a societal or environmental problem with their business idea. 

Now I need to gather facts/evidence that will convince the pitch judges that the (German)- African community suffers from diseases caused from an unhealthy lifestyle including bad eating habits. That is the cause of many other problems they face in this society like not being able to 'perform'/ excel. 

If you could help me gather any information about this topic I would appreciate it a 1000 times. 

Together we can do so much, I know you know ;)! I love the page and support the mission 100%

 

FEATURE: The Southern V

Transitioning towards a Vegan lifestyle was fairly easy for our family given the dairy intolerance and more severe allergies that our youngest daughter experienced.  The ethical reasons only helped propel us as well. However there were limited options for Vegan sweets, and a meal without dessert is just cruel right?

 Self-taught and naturally creative, Tiffany went to the lab to get cooking.  Creating Nashville's first and only vegan ice cream cake and beloved "KK" style glazed yeast donuts, vegans and non-vegans are loving that their tastebuds can't tell the difference!

We have dedicated a lot of time mastering our craft and are confident that you will taste the authenticity. People are amazed that so much flavor can come from treats that are free of dairy, eggs, soy, artificial coloring or flavors, and animal-derived products. Our hope is to educate others through food. Once you try us, we will convert you! Our belief is that if you can find a cleaner, allergy-friendly and cruelty-free substitute, why wouldn't you make the switch to veganism?

The Southern V storefront is slated for a Summer 2016 opening and will include a cafe menu and by-the-scoop ice cream offerings. Currently, you can order online or find us at pop-up locations and events around the city. If you are in or around the Nashville, TN area, be sure to find us at Nashville's first Vegan Festival on April 9, 2016 from 10am-4pm on Vanderbilt University's Campus.

Links:

www.TheSouthernV.com

www.Facebook.com/TheSouthernV

www.Instagram.com/TheSouthernV

FEATURE: Fa Chun

Photo from 1974 of my parents and siblings.  I’m 2nd from the right.

Photo from 1974 of my parents and siblings.  I’m 2nd from the right.

I grew up on the East Coast in the 1960s, and I became a vegetarian as a teen, a lifestyle unlike the majority of people in my suburban community.  At that time, I strongly felt that being aligned with a mainstream, meat-eating society was unjust; primarily because the amount of resources needed for meat and poultry production was/is significantly more than what is necessary to produce food for a healthy, plant-based diet.  Tassajara Cooking by Edward Espe Brown, and Diet for a Small Planet by Frances Moore Lappé, were books that influenced me during that time.  In the mid-1970s and early 1980s, I attended college; lived in three states; studied dance and visual arts; and worked with students at Rutgers.

Fast forwarding to the 1990s, I walked away from an active life in Hub City and a position at a civil rights law firm in NYC, moving cross-country to the Sonoran Desert. 

I became a foster-parent; then a mother by adoption; and now I’m a nana.  I have been employed for twelve years as a social worker.  Prior to that, I did criminal defense mitigation work; behavioral health support for needle exchange clients; and advocacy for people living with HIV/AIDS.  We have also been involved with rescue work benefiting animal companions.  

Three years ago, I became the second Black woman ordained in our Chán (Zen) order.  From a spiritual point of view, the vegan lifestyle compliments Buddhist practices for moving beyond an illusory sense of self, as we say, to ultimately embrace Śūnyatā (emptiness or openness).  I must confess that I did not become completely vegan until Dec. 2015.  Why go vegan after being vegetarian for so long? In part because my commitment to ending the suffering of sentient beings, at least as far as what I ate, had been inadequate.  

Why shouldn’t I, a person of relative affluence compared to people in impoverished communities around the world, take my diet to the next level?  How might I have been complicit in the suffering of other beings?  Buying cage-free chicken eggs?Yeah, that still promotes suffering.That half-and-half in a breve latte?  Not okay, really, when milk from a cow was designed for her calves.  Acres of land used to graze cattle and other animals that could be used for other purposes or left alone? Clean water appropriated by the beef and poultry industries, or fish farms, when people are forced to drink unsafe water from contaminated pipes?  Thanks, but no thanks.  

Circling back, the reasons for becoming a vegetarian, for me, were the reasons to become a vegan.  It wasn’t too difficult once I became a hard-core, incredibly diligent, label-reading consumer. Little did I know initially that as an added bonus, giving up dairy would improve my overall health.  And really, when we are blessed with many options, why not do what is best for the greatest number of human and non-human beings?  Fortunately, where we live in Southern Arizona, there are opportunities to purchase reasonably priced fruits and vegetables from groups like the Borderlands Food Bank’s Produce On Wheels Without Waste, or the Market on the Move, since we are so close to Mexico.

What’s my advice if you’re considering veganism but worry that it’s too extreme, difficult or expensive?  I am the only vegan in my household; however, everyone at home now eats more fruits and vegetables, so it’s all good.  There are lots of materials you can find online like Black Vegans Rock; or just Google Black Vegans to find sites like Vegans of Color; or go to a library and check out a book or two.  You can even find free or low-cost vegan books for your Kindle on Amazon.  Speaking of money, I have found that I have a little more change in my pockets since I don’t eat so-called convenience foods from places like Starbucks or the corner mart.  

Still not convinced?  Try meditating on the idea that human and non-human beings are interdependent; that all beings suffer; but the good news is, you can make positive choices to diminish the suffering of others as you become healthier.  

LINKS

Twitter: @eight4878